Meet BlackRock, the New Great Vampire Squid
BlackRock is a global financial giant with customers in 100 countries and its tentacles in major asset classes all over the world; and it now manages the spigots to trillions of bailout dollars from the Federal Reserve. The fate of a large portion of the country’s corporations has been put in the hands of a megalithic private entity with the private capitalist mandate to make as much money as possible for its owners and investors; and that is what it has proceeded to do.
To
most people, if they are familiar with it at all, BlackRock is an asset
manager that helps pension funds and retirees manage their savings
through “passive” investments that track the stock market. But working
behind the scenes, it is much more than that. BlackRock has been called
“the most powerful institution in the financial system,” “the most
powerful company in the world” and the “secret power.” It is the world’s
largest asset manager and “shadow bank,” larger than the world’s
largest bank (which is in China), with over $7 trillion in assets under
direct management and another $20 trillion managed through its Aladdin
risk-monitoring software. BlackRock has also been called “the fourth branch of government” and “almost a shadow government”,
but no part of it actually belongs to the government. Despite its size
and global power, BlackRock is not even regulated as a “Systemically
Important Financial Institution” under the Dodd-Frank Act, thanks to
pressure from its CEO Larry Fink, who has long had “cozy” relationships with government officials.
BlackRock’s
strategic importance and political weight were evident when four
BlackRock executives, led by former Swiss National Bank head Philipp
Hildebrand, presented a proposal
at the annual meeting of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in
August 2019 for an economic reset that was actually put into effect in
March 2020. Acknowledging that central bankers were running out of ammunition
for controlling the money supply and the economy, the BlackRock group
argued that it was time for the central bank to abandon its long-vaunted
independence and join monetary policy (the usual province of the
central bank) with fiscal policy (the usual province of the
legislature). They proposed that the central bank maintain a “Standing
Emergency Fiscal Facility” that would be activated when interest rate
manipulation was no longer working to avoid deflation. The Facility
would be deployed by an “independent expert” appointed by the central
bank.
The
COVID-19 crisis presented the perfect opportunity to execute this
proposal in the US, with BlackRock itself appointed to administer it. In
March 2020, it was awarded a no-bid contract under the Coronavirus Aid,
Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) to deploy a $454 billion
slush fund established by the Treasury in partnership with the Federal
Reserve. This fund in turn could be leveraged to provide over $4
trillion in Federal Reserve credit. While the public was distracted with
protests, riots and lockdowns, BlackRock suddenly emerged from the
shadows to become the “fourth branch of government,” managing the
controls to the central bank’s print-on-demand fiat money. How did that
happen and what are the implications?
Rising from the Shadows
BlackRock
was founded in 1988 in partnership with the Blackstone Group, a
multinational private equity management firm that would become notorious
after the 2008-09 banking crisis for snatching up foreclosed homes at
firesale prices and renting them at inflated prices. BlackRock first
grew its balance sheet in the 1990s and 2000s by promoting the
mortgage-backed securities (MBS) that brought down the economy in 2008.
Knowing the MBS business from the inside, it was then put in charge of
the Federal Reserve’s “Maiden Lane” facilities. Called “special purpose
vehicles,” these were used to buy “toxic” assets
(largely unmarketable MBS) from Bear Stearns and American Insurance
Group (AIG), something the Fed was not legally allowed to do itself.
BlackRock
really made its fortunes, however, in “exchange traded funds” (ETFs).
It gained trillions in investable assets after it acquired the iShares
series of ETFs in a takeover of Barclays Global Investors in 2009. By
2020, the wildly successful iShares series included over 800 funds and $1.9 trillion in assets under management.
Exchange
traded funds are bought and sold like shares but operate as
index-tracking funds, passively following specific indices such as the
S&P 500, the benchmark index of America’s largest corporations and
the index in which most people invest. Today the fast-growing ETF sector
controls nearly half of all investments
in US stocks, and it is highly concentrated. The sector is dominated by
just three giant American asset managers – BlackRock, Vanguard and
State Street, the “Big Three” – with BlackRock the clear global leader.
By 2017, the Big Three together had become the largest shareholder
in almost 90% of S&P 500 firms, including Apple, Microsoft,
ExxonMobil, General Electric and Coca-Cola. BlackRock also owns major
interests in nearly every mega-bank and in major media.
In
March 2020, based on its expertise with the Maiden Lane facilities and
its sophisticated Aladdin risk-monitoring software, BlackRock got the
job of dispensing Federal Reserve funds through eleven “special purpose
vehicles” authorized under the CARES Act. Like the Maiden Lane
facilities, these vehicles were designed to allow the Fed, which is
legally limited to purchasing safe federally-guaranteed assets, to
finance the purchase of riskier assets in the market.
Blackrock Bails Itself Out
The national lockdown left states, cities and local businesses in desperate need of federal government aid. But according to David Dayen in The American Prospect,
as of May 30 (the Fed’s last monthly report), the only purchases made
under the Fed’s new BlackRock-administered SPVs were ETFs, mainly owned
by BlackRock itself. Between May 14 and May 20, about $1.58 billion in
ETFs were bought through the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility
(SMCCF), of which $746 million or about 47% came from BlackRock ETFs.
The Fed continued to buy more ETFs after May 20, and investors piled in
behind, resulting in huge inflows into BlackRock’s corporate bond ETFs.
In
fact, these ETFs needed a bailout; and BlackRock used its very favorable
position with the government to get one. The complicated mechanisms and
risks underlying ETFs are explained in an April 3 article by business law professor Ryan Clements, who begins his post:
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) are at the heart of the COVID-19 financial crisis . Over forty percent of the trading volume during the mid-March selloff was in ETFs ….
The ETFs were trading well below the value of their underlying bonds, which were dropping like a rock.
Some ETFs were failing altogether. The problem was something critics
had long warned of: while ETFs are very liquid, trading on demand like
stocks, the assets that make up their portfolios are not. When the
market drops and investors flee, the ETFs can have trouble coming up
with the funds to settle up without trading at a deep discount; and that
is what was happening in March.
According to a May 3 article in The National,
“The sector was ultimately saved by the US Federal Reserve’s pledge on
March 23 to buy investment-grade credit and certain ETFs. This provided
the liquidity needed to rescue bonds that had been floundering in a
market with no buyers.”
Prof.
Clements states that if the Fed had not stepped in, “a ‘doom loop’
could have materialized where continued selling pressure in the ETF
market exacerbated a fire-sale in the underlying [bonds], and again
vice-versa, in a procyclical pile-on with devastating consequences.” He
observes:
There’s
an unsettling form of market alchemy that takes place when illiquid,
over-the-counter bonds are transformed into instantly liquid ETFs. ETF
“liquidity transformation” is now being supported by the government,
just like liquidity transformation in mortgage backed securities and
shadow banking was supported in 2008.
Working for Whom?
BlackRock
got a bailout with no debate in Congress, no “penalty” interest rate of
the sort imposed on states and cities borrowing in the Fed’s Municipal
Liquidity Facility, no complicated paperwork or waiting in line for
scarce Small Business Administration loans, no strings attached. It just
quietly bailed itself out.
It
might be argued that this bailout was good and necessary, since the
market was saved from a disastrous “doom loop,” and so were the pension
funds and the savings of millions of investors. Although BlackRock has a
controlling interest in all the major corporations in the S&P 500,
it professes not to “own” the funds. It just acts as a kind of
“custodian” for its investors — or so it claims. But BlackRock and the
other Big 3 ETFs vote the corporations’ shares; so from the point of
view of management, they are the owners. And as observed in a 2017
article from the University of Amsterdam titled “These Three Firms Own Corporate America,”
they vote 90% of the time in favor of management. That means they tend
to vote against shareholder initiatives, against labor, and against the
public interest. BlackRock is not actually working for us, although we
the American people have now become its largest client base.
In a 2018 review titled “Blackrock – The Company That Owns the World”,
a multinational research group called Investigate Europe concluded that
BlackRock “undermines competition through owning shares in competing
companies, blurs boundaries between private capital and government
affairs by working closely with regulators, and advocates for
privatization of pension schemes in order to channel savings capital
into its own funds.”
Daniela
Gabor, Professor of Macroeconomics at the University of Western England
in Bristol, concluded after following a number of regulatory debates in
Brussels that it was no longer the banks that wielded the financial
power; it was the asset managers. She said:
We
are often told that a manager is there to invest our money for our old
age. But it’s much more than that. In my opinion, BlackRock reflects the
renunciation of the welfare state. Its rise in power goes hand-in-hand
with ongoing structural changes; in finance, but also in the nature of
the social contract that unites the citizen and the state.
That
these structural changes are planned and deliberate is evident in
BlackRock’s August 2019 white paper laying out an economic reset that
has now been implemented with BlackRock at the helm.
Public
policy is made today in ways that favor the stock market, which is
considered the barometer of the economy, although it has little to do
with the strength of the real, productive economy. Giant pension and
other investment funds largely control the stock market, and the asset
managers control the funds. That effectively puts BlackRock, the largest
and most influential asset manager, in the driver’s seat in controlling
the economy.
As Peter Ewart notes
in a May 14 article on BlackRock titled “Foxes in the Henhouse,” today
the economic system “is not classical capitalism but rather state
monopoly capitalism, where giant enterprises are regularly backstopped
with public funds and the boundaries between the state and the financial
oligarchy are virtually non-existent.”
If
the corporate oligarchs are too big and strategically important to be
broken up under the antitrust laws, rather than bailing them out they
should be nationalized and put directly into the service of the public.
At the very least, BlackRock should be regulated as a too-big-to-fail
Systemically Important Financial Institution. Better yet would be to
regulate it as a public utility. No private, unelected entity should
have the power over the economy that BlackRock has, without a legally
enforceable fiduciary duty to wield it in the public interest.
Ellen Brown is an attorney, chair of the Public Banking Institute, and author of thirteen books including Web of Debt, The Public Bank Solution, and Banking on the People: Democratizing Money in the Digital Age. She also co-hosts a radio program on PRN.FM called “It’s Our Money.” Her 300+ blog articles are posted at EllenBrown.com.
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